Mark Doidge

The clever politics of Sepp Blatter's 'resignation'

Sepp Blatter announcing his resignation as Fifa president on Tuesday. Blatter is a wily old fox. Even when the world thinks he has stepped down, it may just be that he has done anything but.PHOTO: REUTERS

And so Sepp Blatter has defied all expectations and announced his intention to step aside from the presidency of Fifa after 17 years at the helm. Despite numerous scandals afflicting the organisation he ran, he won four successive elections. Finally, it seems that the long arm of American law has finally reached close enough to Fifa's heart to force its leader to step down.

Fifa has been part of Blatter's life for 40 years. He was headhunted by Horst Dassler, the chief executive officer of German sportswear firm adidas, and learnt his trade at adidas' headquarters in Landersheim. He then became a technical director in 1975 before assuming the role of secretary-general in 1981. He finally ousted his mentor, Joao Havelange, in 1998, to become president.

Significantly, despite every news organisation stating that he had resigned, he did not use the word during his brief press conference. The masterful politician remained in control until the end, and left us not entirely certain if it is indeed the end.

The key passage in Blatter's announcement stated: "I have decided to lay down my mandate at an extraordinary elective Congress. I will continue to exercise my functions as Fifa President until that election."

Until we hear differently - and this is a fluid situation - he is still at Fifa. More importantly, he is setting the agenda.

In other words, we may have just witnessed a piece of skill and mastery to remind us of Argentina hero Leo Messi. While his opponents are busy fighting over who will succeed him, it appears he will be setting the agenda for when they finally replace him, and the seeds were in his announcement.

The master tactician may have outmanoeuvred everyone. Within his brief announcement there are statements that should cause concern. He suggested that the executive committee must be reduced in size and its members "should be elected through the Fifa Congress".

This looks like a clever ploy to remove the additional members that are there for historical reasons. Chief among these will be the anachronistic position for the home countries such as England, held due to their position as the inventors of the modern game.

Blatter continued his brief manifesto for change by saying: "The integrity checks for all executive committee members must be organised centrally through Fifa and not through the confederations." This is another clever piece of politics.

By centralising the checks within Fifa, he is accumulating more power for the organisation - at the expense of the regional confederations. This can be seen as a swipe at Uefa, which has attempted to act as a morality check on Blatter and his cabal. Blatter was angry that his former supporter, Uefa president Michel Platini, had threatened to boycott the World Cup

Blatter is ruthless. When his relationship with his former secretary-general, Michel Zen-Ruffinen soured, he established a separate administration within Fifa to ostracise him, and then had him removed. He said to his former supporter Mohamed Bin Hammam that he would set a limit of two terms for presidents to allow the Qatari to stand. When Hammam did stand against him, Blatter brought down the full weight of the Fifa ethics committee onto his head.

Now Blatter is suggesting term limits for the position of president and executive committee roles. By bringing them in now, he neuters whoever replaces him. Despite saying that he has been blocked in the past, he has been the one in control. And he is not relinquishing it yet.

Football fans should not assume that this is the last we will see of Blatter. It is worth noting that Article 19 of the Fifa statutes explicitly states:

"The Congress may bestow the title of honorary president, honorary vice-president or honorary member upon any former member of the Executive Committee for meritorious service to football."

After successfully defending his presidency only five days ago, would anyone be surprised if he was voted into an honorary role? His predecessor Havelange was elected honorary president despite allegations of corruption.

And these positions still attract the highly generous Fifa expenses package. Blatter is a wily old fox. One does not remain atop the Fifa pyramid for so long without knowing how to play politics.

Even when the world thinks he has stepped down, it may just be that he has done anything but.

The writer is Senior Research Fellow in Sociology of Sport at University of Brighton.

This article first appeared in The Conversation (http://theconversation.com), a website which carries analysis by academics and researchers in Australia, the United States and United Kingdom.

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